Hi Anra (and anyone also interested in NC vocabs)
Please see
http://public.lexaurus.net/
We put this up just to persist the more common NC vocabs after the ISB
withdrew funding for a live education vocab service in 2008, quite ironic
considering the interest now!
Cheers
Rob
PS I think we do have pretty much all of them 'in a drawer somewhere' as you
intimated : )
-----Original Message-----
From: Museums Computer Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Anra
Kennedy
Sent: 01 May 2012 18:07
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: SHIC
Hi Nick, Richard et al
With ref to below Nick, I know it's a stretch, but any chance of the Culture
Grid Vocab Bank also taking on the National Curriculum vocabularies?
Especially with the rumblings around the Henley Review there must be museums
who'd find this useful?
Sad as it is, I find myself missing the old Becta Vocab Bank - see
http://developer.k-int.com/bank/index.php?page=about for the ghost of some
educational vocabs. And I do believe it was Knowledge Integration who built
the system for Becta so might they have the curriculum ones rattling around
a drawer somewhere?
Or does anyone else on the list know where the vocabs went? Presumably
commercial software suppliers must need/use them? We have the last version
of KS1-4 published by QCA/Becta before everything crumbled within
Culture24's system but I don't know how up-to-date they are...
any pointers gratefully received.
Thanks,
Anra
Anra Kennedy
Content & Partnerships Director, Culture24
Direct line: 01273 623357
Office line: 01273 623266
Follow: @anrakennedy
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-----Original Message-----
From: Museums Computer Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
Nick Poole
Sent: 01 May 2012 17:52
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: SHIC
Hi Richard,
Thanks for the prompt! Yes, Collections Trust and the Social History
Curators Group have been working to develop an electronic version of
SHIC that can be used both as a reference tool but also as a
machine-readable vocabulary.
In fact (whispers) our partners Knowledge Integration have already
integrated the current version of SHIC into the Culture Grid Vocab Bank
- go to http://culturegrid.lexaurus.net/culturegrid/browse and scroll
down. You can browse the structure, and also download the vocabulary as
an XML document. The longer-term aim of the Vocab Bank is to provide
web-service access to a range of SKOSified vocabularies, but the
interest in this from museums has been pretty muted - I'd love to know
whether there is an appetite for this stuff before we go ahead and
invest in developing it!
SHCG's aim is to use this current version to develop an updated version.
The original SHIC Working Party do retain an interest in its
development, and we are currently negotiating how best to take the
development of SHIC forward.
I hope this helps, and I'd welcome views on the next steps with the
Vocab Bank!
Nick
-----Original Message-----
From: Museums Computer Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
Richard Light
Sent: 01 May 2012 17:42
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: SHIC
Robin,
Yes, I have a version of SHIC which I have lovingly reconstructed from
various sources (with considerable help from Stuart, who I am sure /is
/still out there), and which now lives happily in a Modes data file as a
set of XML records. That's the good news.
However, I am not sure what the status of this version is, and whether I
would be free to let you have a copy. Collections Trust and the SHCG
have been expressing an interest in SHIC of late, and of course the
original SHIC Working Party might still want to have a say. There is
the idea of SKOS-ifying SHIC. Would anyone care to comment?
At a practical level, would a dump of SHIC as an XML document be of use
to you?
Richard
On 01/05/2012 17:26, Robin Patel wrote:
> Hello All
>
> Second time poster, long time lurker.
>
> Very quick question: Does anyone have a digital version of SHIC they
> could identify and (potentially) lead us to? We are in the midst of a
> retrospective documentation project and, apart from developing our own
> in-house classification, we feel that SHIC fits the bill for the types
> of collections we are dealing with. I have a hardcopy 2nd ed. here,
> but I would rather have something searchable without resorting to the
> pitfalls of OCR.
>
> I have contacted Stuart via his website, but I fear that email is
> longer active...
>
> Many Thanks :-)
>
> Robin
>
>
--
*Richard Light*
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